10/08/2012 05:00:00 UTC
Comment Section
- A good ICME, strong CME source, however, "stealth" surface signature (J. Zhang)
- A good example of "stealth" CME: bright CME, but no or very weak surface signature (in terms of no flare, dimming, filament eruption etc)
 
- This event has a very difficult to distinguish source region, if you look very closely at S22 W38 just before 00:00 UT on the 10/05 it is possible to see a very small disturbance on the Sun, especially in 304 Angstroms. (Hess)
- M. Temmer: clear on-disk signatures - movie from SDO - are visible. It is a "silent" CME, hard to catch for space weather forecasters, but not a "stealth" in sense of no solar surface signatures at all.
http://sdowww.lmsal.com/sdomedia/SunInTime/2012/10/04/daily_211-193-171.mov [October 4, 15UT, central south]
- C. Moestl: looking at the whole October 4 SDO movie, there are also two other minor eruptions which I find very hard to distinguish from the 15 UT one (1. 7 UT, slightly west of disk center; 2. 0930 UT, south-east quadrant)
- timing - evolution from SDO FoV to coronagraph - is an issue and needs to be looked at in detail
- these eruptions are also visible in the SWAP data (http://proba2.oma.be/), including another minor one at 14h UT in the south-east quadrant (A. Devos)
- Discussion in USTC-China ISEST Workshop on April 19, 2014
Image Data
In-Situ Data
A combination of SWEPAM and MAG data from the ACE Satellite: 
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The blue lines are an approximation of the CME cloud and the red line denotes the shock.
Jmaps
Jmaps from STEREO A and B along the CME leading edge position angle 
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Video Data
AIA 304 Running Difference Movie 
AIA 195 Running Difference Movie 
STEREO EUVIA 304 
STEREO COR2A 
STEREO COR2B 
STEREO HI1A 
STEREO HI1B 
STEREO HI2A 
STEREO HI2B 
PROBA2 SWAP 174 
PROBA2 SWAP 174 Difference Movie 
